Favorite Sounds
Like the song, my "Favorite Things", all of us can easily make a list of our favorite things. Some of mine are my guitar, singing my oven, my little fountain 'of water in the living room.
Most people can easily get a list of their favorite foods. Not chocolate salivation? Spaghetti? Popcorn? Sprouts? (Just kidding)
And what about smell? One of my favorites is grown. Since the end of university, I have planted roses around every house that I lived inMany people like the smell of freshly baked bread. And like a forest just after a rain storm?
Most people know that it feels as soft as rose petals fall, a silk shirt against the skin, the cheek of a child.
The other day I sat down to consider my favorite sounds. Many of us have favorite songs, but when you get the songs out of the picture, what remains? I had to think about this.
It 'easy to create a list of sounds that people have. Put your nails scraping down aPlate, a dentist's drill, the squeal of feedback from a microphone, a child screaming, a siren warning system that is not commented you exit, fluorescent tubes noisy.
I remember a few years ago, when Kellogg's cereals have a special offer for free if you send an alarm Box Tops enough. This is Kellogg's rooster, and instead of a gossip was like a rooster crowed. In a moment of weakness, I was away for one of my children. Well, enough for this shit "a doodle doos" that thingsbeen hidden where nobody would have ever found. I have not yet found.
Here is a list of some of my favorite sounds: laughter – especially a child, wind chimes, the wind moving through the pines, the waves – both soft and break them, rippling water, a song Mockingbird, rustle of leaves, drops of rain on a tent.
Of all the senses, the public has deep ties with the rest of the body. Your brain has twelve major cranial nerves. These nerves carry commands in many parts ofbody, senses, throat, heart, lungs, stomach, liver, bladder, kidney, heart and much more. Ten of the twelve cranial nerves travel through the auditory system. This means that all parts of the body receives sound vibrations mixed with commands issued from the nerve. The sound does not vibrate only the ear. Vibrates the whole body!
The effect of music and sound of our emotions are well studied and documented. Movie composers build their careerit. Not so well known that many sounds by singing in different parts of the body. An exploration of how the sounds around you can affect the body provides some useful information. The next time you are in a concert, listening to someone playing a musical instrument to listen to your favorite CD, or simply go out, I invite you to explore in order to listen to the whole body. How do you feel the bass? How do you feel the sounds out loud? If someone sings or speaks, how you feelvoice?
Once the general location of a particular sound firmly in your body, so ask the question: "How it feels to rivet this part of my body?" Answering this question can help to initiate a physical understanding of what sounds good to hear and what sounds to be developed.
